A cross–sectional study on the prevalence and associated risk factors for workplace violence against Chinese nurses
Lei Shi,Danyang Zhang,Chenyu Zhou,Libin Yang,Tao Sun,Tianjun Hao,Xiangwen Peng,Lei Gao,Wenhui Liu,Yi Mu,Yuzhen Han,Lihua Fan +11 more
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TL;DR: Workplace violence is frequent in China’s tertiary and county–level hospitals; its occurrence is especially frequent in the emergency and paediatric departments and it is necessary to cope with workplace violence by developing effective control strategies at individual, hospital and national levels.
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Abstract: Objectives The purpose of the present study was to explore the characteristics of workplace violence that Chinese nurses at tertiary and county–level hospitals encountered in the 12 months from December 2014 to January 2016, to identify and analyse risk factors for workplace violence, and to establish the basis for future preventive strategies. Design A cross–sectional study. Setting A total of 44 tertiary hospitals and 90 county–level hospitals in 16 provinces (municipalities or autonomous regions) in China. Methods We used stratified random sampling to collect data from December 2014 to January 2016. We distributed 21 360 questionnaires, and 15 970 participants provided valid data (effective response rate=74.77%). We conducted binary logistic regression analyses on the risk factors for workplace violence among the nurses in our sample and analysed the reasons for aggression. Results The prevalence of workplace violence was 65.8%; of this, 64.9% was verbal violence, and physical violence and sexual harassment accounted for 11.8% and 3.9%, respectively. Frequent workplace violence occurred primarily in emergency and paediatric departments. Respondents reported that patients’ relatives were the main perpetrators in tertiary and county–level hospitals. Logistic regression analysis showed that respondents’ age, department, years of experience and direct contact with patients were common risk factors at different levels of hospitals. Conclusions Workplace violence is frequent in China’s tertiary and county–level hospitals; its occurrence is especially frequent in the emergency and paediatric departments. It is necessary to cope with workplace violence by developing effective control strategies at individual, hospital and national levels.
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TL;DR: The mediating effects of psychological demands and social support mediate the relationship between WV and turnover intention are determined and the results expand the findings of previous research and demonstrate the complexity of the relationship.
Workplace violence and its associated factors among nurses working in university teaching hospitals in Southern Ethiopia: a mixed approach
Bereket Hegeno Anose,Adem Esmael Roba,Zegeye Regassa Gemechu,Asnakech Zekiwos Heliso,Segni Begna Negassa,Teshale Belayneh Ashamo +5 more
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TL;DR: High prevalence of workplace violence among nurses in university teaching hospitals in Southern Ethiopia. Factors associated with workplace violence include department, number of nurses in the same working unit, direct physical contact, and work time.
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•Journal Article
Prevalence of workplace violence against nurses in Hong Kong
R. P. W. Kwok,Y. K. Law,K. E. Li,Y. C. Ng,M. H. Cheung,V. K. P. Fung,K. T. T. Kwok,J. M. K. Tong,P. F. Yen,Wing-Cheong Leung +9 more
TL;DR: Workplace violence against nurses is a significant problem in Hong Kong and further large-scale studies should be conducted to more closely examine the problem.
Workplace violence against physicians and nurses in Palestinian public hospitals: a cross-sectional study
Mohamad Kitaneh,Motasem Hamdan +1 more
TL;DR: Healthcare workers are at comparably high risk of violent incidents in Palestinian public hospitals and decision makers need to be aware of the causes and potential consequences of such events.